Similar Items: To what extent do South Africa and Scotland comparatively respect, protect and fulfill children's rights in the context of youth justice and in light of their international and regional obligations?
- An evaluation of whether South Africa fulfils the requirements of the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: To what extent is South Africa obliged to realise the right to basic education, and to what extent is South Africa meeting those obligations?
- The responsibility to protect (R2P): an analysis of the fulfillment of the obligation borne by the Nigerian Government and the international community to protect the Nigerian population from Boko Haram
- The obligation to respect the right to assembly in Kenya
- Balancing parental responsibility and state obligation in fulfilling the socio-economic rights of children under the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child
- Resocialisation as an obligation, right and remedy under international and African regional human rights law in the fulfilment of African women's rights
- To what extent does the European recast Qualification Directive protect refugee women seeking asylum on the basis of gender-related claims?
Author: Chirwa, Danwood Mzikenge
- The exercise of prosecutorial discretion during preliminary examinations at the International Criminal Court
- Unlocking the revolutionary potential of Kenya's constitutional right to fair administrative action
- Protecting Human rights within Regional Economic Integration arrangements: A case study of the SADC tribunal
- Human rights and jus Cogens: Questioning the use of normative hierarchy theory in human rights law
- A critical analysis of the impact of the Bill of Rights on punishment in Malawi
- The balance between child autonomy and parental autonomy in Malawi; an analysis of the Child Care, Protection and Justice Act